Informed Consent

  • Read more: “Error in Judgment” and Informed Consent

    “Error in Judgment” and Informed Consent

    By Alex Stein When conventional standards of practice allow a physician to choose between two or more ways to treat or diagnose a patient, she is free to select any of those ways. The fact that her chosen procedure subsequently proves inferior to the alternatives and works badly for the patient is of no consequence: the…

  • Read more: Federal Newborn Screening Law Emphasizes Informed Consent

    Federal Newborn Screening Law Emphasizes Informed Consent

    By Allison M. Whelan (Guest Blogger) On December 18, 2014, President Obama signed into law the Newborn Screening Saves Lives Reauthorization Act of 2014. The Act includes new timeliness and tracking measures to ensure newborn babies with deadly yet treatable disorders are diagnosed quickly. These changes responded to a Milwaukee Journal Sentinel investigation that found thousands…

  • Read more: A Right to Die? The M.D. Case Before the Argentine Supreme Court

    A Right to Die? The M.D. Case Before the Argentine Supreme Court

    By Martín Hevia In 2015, the Argentine Supreme Court is to hear a case involving the right to die, death with dignity, and informed consent. Because of a car accident in the Province of Neuquén, M.D., the patient, has been in a permanent, irreversible, vegetative state for 18 years. His sisters and curators have requested…

  • Read more: February 9-13, 2015: Visit Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm to Learn More About Biobanking

    February 9-13, 2015: Visit Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm to Learn More About Biobanking

    By Timo Minssen The following information has been extracted from the webpage of the BioBanking and Molecular Resource Infrastructure of Sweden on the course Biobanking as a Resource for Biomedical Research, February 9-13, 2015 at Karolinska Institutet (Stockholm).  Purpose and Goal Biobanks constitute a powerful resource in medical research with access to millions of samples and associated data…

  • Read more: Parental Consent for Youth Contact Sports Participation

    Parental Consent for Youth Contact Sports Participation

      By Christine Baugh As we enter into the fall sports season, it’s unlikely that a week will go by where we don’t hear the current buzzword in sports community: concussion. Whether in reference to an acute player injury, an untimely death, new or ongoing litigation, or rule changes in sport, the athletic community and…

  • Read more: Art Caplan: WHO Ethics Committee on Ebola Just a Start

    Art Caplan: WHO Ethics Committee on Ebola Just a Start

    By Arthur Caplan Art Caplan has a series of new opinion pieces out on the WHO ethics advisory committee meeting that approved the use of experimental drugs to treat patients ill with Ebola. He suggests deeper exploration of issues of informed consent, corporate responsibility, and resource allocation in this blog post for The Health Care…

  • Read more: Capsule Endoscopy Instead of Colonoscopy? The FDA Approves the PillCam COLON

    Capsule Endoscopy Instead of Colonoscopy? The FDA Approves the PillCam COLON

    By Jonathan J. Darrow In January, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the use of the PillCam COLON 2 as a minimally-invasive means of viewing the colon, a development that is sure to be welcomed by U.S. patients who currently undergo an estimated 14 million colonoscopies each year.  While the approval represents a major step…

  • Read more: Anti-Abortion Practices at Catholic Hospitals as Medical Malpractice

    Anti-Abortion Practices at Catholic Hospitals as Medical Malpractice

    By Alex Stein The New York Times has recently reported about a suit filed by ACLU against the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops for requiring Catholic hospitals to avoid abortion “even when doing so places a woman’s health or life at risk.” The suit unfolds a disturbing story about an 18-week pregnant woman who rushed…

  • Read more: Oregon’s Unfulfilled Tort Reform

    Oregon’s Unfulfilled Tort Reform

    By Alex Stein Oregon has a statute capping noneconomic damages recoverable in medical malpractice suits at $500,000. The Oregon Supreme Court decided that this cap is unconstitutional insofar as it clashes with a person’s right to recover full jury-assessed compensation for injuries recognized as actionable in 1857 when Oregon adopted its constitution. Specifically, it ruled that…

  • Read more: Daubert as a Problem for Psychiatrists

    Daubert as a Problem for Psychiatrists

    By Alex Stein Most psychiatrists don’t know about it, but the switch from Frye to Daubert in the admission of expert testimony matters for them a lot. Psychiatrists treat patients with second-generation antipsychotics: Zyprexa, Risperdal, Clozaril, Seroquel, and similar drugs. A reputable, but still controversial, body of research links those drugs to tardive dyskinesia: a serious…